Getting Married in Rome
Rome is a breathtaking destination-wedding location. Rome is 3,000 years of civilization compressed into one city — where every corner reveals an ancient ruin, a Baroque fountain, or a Renaissance fresco, and where the food, the coffee, and the evening passeggiata remind you that the Romans perfected the art of living.
Rome offers both civil and religious weddings (Vatican, civil registry). The city's historic villas, gardens, and rooftop venues are unparalleled.
The Wedding Unicorn coordinates Rome destination weddings end-to-end — venue sourcing and negotiation, vendor coordination (photographers, florists, caterers, musicians), legal marriage documentation, guest travel block negotiation, multi-day event itineraries (welcome dinner, rehearsal, ceremony, day-after brunch), and complete day-of management.
We know what Rome requires for legal or symbolic ceremonies, and we have the vendor relationships to deliver quality that matches the extraordinary setting. Throw a coin in the Trevi Fountain at midnight, eat carbonara at a table that has been there since your grandparents were born, and walk the Appian Way at dawn.
- Best time to visit: April–June, September–October
- 9 hours from New York City
- Language: Italian / English widely spoken
- Visa: No visa required for US citizens (90 days)
- Currency: Euro
- Legal ceremony: ✓ Available for foreigners
- Venue sourcing and contract negotiation
- Guest room block coordination
- Multi-day wedding itinerary planning
- Full vendor management (photo, florals, catering)
- Day-of coordination on-site
7 Nights in Rome — Eternal City, Eternal Love
Vatican grandeur, hidden piazzas, and candlelit trattorie in the city that invented romance
Rome is one of those rare cities that rewards newlyweds on every level — impossible architectural beauty, world-class cuisine at every price point, and a depth of history that makes two thousand years feel present and alive. Walking the cobblestones of Trastevere at dusk with gelato in hand, watching the Tiber glow gold at sunset from the Ponte Sisto, or sharing a dawn espresso at a marble-topped bar before the crowds arrive — these are the moments that stay with couples forever. This seven-night itinerary gives you time to actually inhabit Rome rather than just check its monuments off a list. You'll have days for the Vatican and Colosseum, but also afternoons for wandering off-map into the Jewish Ghetto or the Testaccio food market, evenings for long dinners in candlelit courtyards, and mornings for the quieter, more intimate city that reveals itself before 9am. Rome is best savored slowly — and a honeymoon is precisely the excuse you need.
1Arrival — Trastevere & the Golden Hour
Land at Fiumicino and take the Leonardo Express to Termini, then a taxi to your hotel — the whole journey takes about 45 minutes. Drop your bags and resist the urge to sightsee immediately; instead, walk the fifteen minutes to Trastevere and let Rome's most atmospheric medieval neighborhood be your introduction. The cobblestoned lanes of Trastevere open into flower-draped piazzas and ivy-covered palazzos that look unchanged since the Renaissance. Stop at any bar for a standing espresso, then find a table at Da Enzo al 29 or Tonnarello for your first Roman dinner: cacio e pepe, carbonara, and a carafe of house white from the Castelli Romani hills. After dinner, walk the empty streets to the Tiber and cross Ponte Sisto at midnight — Rome is completely different without crowds, and this first night sets up the love affair perfectly.
- ✦ Leonardo Express train from Fiumicino Airport
- ✦ First evening wander through Trastevere's medieval lanes
- ✦ Dinner at a classic Roman trattoria
- ✦ Midnight walk along the Tiber
2Vatican Day — St. Peter's, the Museums & the Sistine Chapel
Book the 8am Vatican Museums entry to beat the crowds — arriving at opening means you'll reach the Sistine Chapel before the tour groups descend, and Michelangelo's ceiling in near-silence is a profoundly different (and profoundly moving) experience. Take your time in the Gallery of Maps and the Raphael Rooms before emerging, overwhelmed, into St. Peter's Basilica. Climb the dome before noon for vertiginous views over Rome's rooftops and the Tiber snaking south. Lunch near Castel Sant'Angelo — try Osteria dell'Angelo for Roman classics in an authentically unpretentious room. In the afternoon, explore the Castel Sant'Angelo itself, the medieval fortress built on Emperor Hadrian's tomb, and walk the pedestrianized bridge lined with baroque angels to cross back to the historic center. Evening drinks in Piazza Navona, watching the buskers and the sunset play off Bernini's Four Rivers Fountain.
- ✦ Vatican Museums early-morning skip-the-line entry
- ✦ Sistine Chapel before the crowds
- ✦ Climbing the dome of St. Peter's Basilica
- ✦ Castel Sant'Angelo and the bridge of angels
- ✦ Aperitivo in Piazza Navona
3Ancient Rome — The Forum, Palatine Hill & the Colosseum
The Roman Forum, the Palatine Hill, and the Colosseum share a combined ticket and are best tackled together in a single morning. Start at the Forum at 9am and work your way up to the Palatine Hill — where the emperors themselves lived — for sweeping views over the ruins below. The Colosseum is the emotional climax: even jaded travelers stop and stare when they first walk inside the arena. Book the underground arena floor access for a genuinely spine-tingling perspective. By early afternoon you'll be ready for lunch and a slow afternoon exploring the Testaccio neighborhood — Rome's old slaughterhouse district, now its best food destination. Testaccio Market is essential: fresh pasta, Roman street food, and a slice of suppli (fried risotto balls with mozzarella filling) at Supplì Roma. Evening in the Jewish Ghetto, which preserves some of the most beautiful medieval architecture in the city.
- ✦ Roman Forum at 9am before crowds
- ✦ Palatine Hill imperial palaces with panoramic views
- ✦ Colosseum arena floor access
- ✦ Testaccio Market for the best Roman street food
- ✦ Jewish Ghetto evening stroll
4Renaissance Rome — Pantheon, Campo de' Fiori & the Spanish Steps
Morning begins at the Pantheon at 9am — the greatest unreinforced concrete dome in history, still perfect after 2,000 years, and free to enter. The oculus at the top opens to the sky and lets in a column of light that travels slowly around the interior as the hours pass. From the Pantheon, it's a short walk to Campo de' Fiori for espresso and a pastry at the morning market, then through the Palazzo Farnese courtyard to the Jewish Ghetto. Afternoon: the Spanish Steps are most beautiful in early morning or late evening, but at any time the Via Condotti designer shops and the Trinità dei Monti church at the top are worth the climb. Stroll Via Margutta — Rome's most beautiful small street, lined with art galleries and flowering walls — before ending with the Trevi Fountain at dusk. Dinner at Imàgo at the Hassler Hotel for one splurge-worthy meal with the city spread below you.
- ✦ Pantheon oculus and perfect Roman geometry
- ✦ Campo de' Fiori morning market
- ✦ Via Condotti and Spanish Steps
- ✦ Trevi Fountain at dusk
- ✦ Dinner with a view at Imàgo restaurant
5Day Trip to Tivoli — Hadrian's Villa & Villa d'Este
Just 35km from Rome, Tivoli contains two UNESCO World Heritage Sites and an afternoon that feels entirely different from the city. Take the regional train from Tiburtina Station (45 minutes) and head first to Hadrian's Villa, the Roman emperor's 250-acre country retreat built in the 2nd century AD. The scale is extraordinary — pools, theaters, libraries, and baths spread across rolling countryside, all beautifully ruined. After lunch in Tivoli town, the gardens of Villa d'Este are the Renaissance's most spectacular water garden: hundreds of fountains, cascades, and grottos powered entirely by gravity and the waters of the River Aniene. The Avenue of the Hundred Fountains — a 130-meter wall of water jets, moss-covered grottos, and reclining nymphs — is one of the most romantic walks in all of Italy. Return to Rome by early evening for a quiet dinner in Pigneto, the city's up-and-coming creative neighborhood.
- ✦ Hadrian's Villa — the emperor's 250-acre retreat
- ✦ Villa d'Este gardens and the Avenue of the Hundred Fountains
- ✦ Regional train day trip (no car needed)
- ✦ Dinner in Pigneto neighborhood on return
6Borghese Gallery, Via Veneto & a Perfect Roman Evening
The Borghese Gallery holds the greatest collection of Bernini sculptures in the world — his Apollo and Daphne and The Rape of Proserpina are two of the most astonishing things ever made from marble. Entry is limited to timed two-hour slots which must be booked in advance; the intimacy this creates means you can stand two feet from Bernini's work without a crowd. After the gallery, take the path through the Villa Borghese gardens down to the Pincian Hill terrace for the classic panoramic view over Piazza del Popolo and the city beyond. The Via Veneto — Federico Fellini's old stomping ground from La Dolce Vita — winds downhill from here to the Spanish Steps. Browse the Piazza del Popolo, then spend the afternoon at leisure before a final ceremonial dinner in Trastevere: a long Roman meal with many small courses, house wine, and no hurry whatsoever. This is how Romans celebrate.
- ✦ Borghese Gallery and Bernini's marble masterworks
- ✦ Pincian Hill terrace panoramic view
- ✦ Via Veneto and La Dolce Vita atmosphere
- ✦ Long farewell dinner in Trastevere
7Final Morning & Departure
Rome rewards early risers on the last day — set an alarm for 7am and walk to whichever piazza became your favorite over the week. The city belongs to you before the tour groups arrive. A final espresso at the bar where you've been going all week, a last cornetto, and perhaps a detour past the Pantheon or the Trevi Fountain one more time. Fiumicino Airport requires about 75 minutes door-to-gate including the Leonardo Express; for afternoon or evening flights, you may have time for a final slow lunch near the Termini area before heading to the airport. Rome has a way of making every goodbye feel like a promise to return.
- ✦ Final dawn walk to your favorite piazza
- ✦ Last espresso and cornetto at your neighborhood bar
- ✦ Leonardo Express to Fiumicino for departure
Where to Stay
The most refined hotel in Rome — a Rocco Forte property with a legendary terraced garden, exceptional spa, and a location that puts the Spanish Steps, Villa Borghese, and the historic center all within an easy walk.
An intimate 30-room boutique masterpiece in a neoclassical palazzo, with exquisite interiors by Michele Bönan, a rooftop terrace with views of Rome's skyline, and genuinely personal service — the antidote to mega-hotel anonymity.
Sixteen charming rooms at the very top of the Spanish Steps with a rooftop terrace overlooking Rome's rooftops — unbeatable location for the price, and one of the most romantic views in the city over breakfast.
This is a sample — your actual itinerary is fully custom.
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